It was just over a year ago, back in April 2012, that we first learned the intentions of a company known as Planetary Resources
A couple months later, we learned that Planetary Resources was considering letting your average Joe in on the action by using the crowd-funding site Kickstarter
See, in order to mine asteroids, Planetary Resources are going to deploy several different types of spacecraft. The first step is the Arkyd 100, a small, relatively inexpensive satellite with a telescope that will be put into Earth's orbit. These satellite telescopes are what they will use to identify the best potential asteroids. This Kickstarter is doing something unique, though, they are putting the controls of one of Arkyd 100s into your hands.
The lower-end rewards include a space "selfie." For $25 a picture of your choosing will display on the Arkyd's screen, and it will take a picture of itself with the Earth in the background. That doesn't give you any actual control over the Arkyd, but for 25 bucks, that's still pretty damn cool. As you get into higher pledges, you get to stuff like the ability to use the Arkyd to take a picture of anything you want, in space or on Earth. For more money, you can keep track of that spot, or take a series of photos. You can also donate your time to science, or to schools.
The Kickstarter attempting to raise $1,000,000 in 32 days, which is obviously a lot, but hell, we've seen video games reach for (and achieve) $2M goals before. What's interesting is that for that relatively small amount, it seems that Planetary Resources isn't looking to fund its loftier goals (asteroid mining), it seems more that they are trying to cover the costs of giving an open, space satellite to the world, which is something we've never seen before. At a time when NASA budgets are getting slashed like crazy, we're dying to get people more interested in space exploration. By democratizing a part of it, that might just be the spark needed to fuel the imagination of a new generation of scientists. At least we hope so. How many more stockbrokers do we need? [Planetary Resources / Kickstarter]
Source: http://gizmodo.com/heres-your-chance-to-become-one-of-the-first-asteroid-510285942
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